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tv   CNN This Morning Weekend  CNN  August 6, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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sunday morning. welcome to it. good morning. i'm victor blackwell. this is "cnn this morning." >> >> good morning. i'm amara walker. thank you for sharing a part of your day with us. we have a lot of stuff to talk about. interesting stuff, sports, news. right now make or break for the u.s. women's soccer team. all eyes are on team usa as they face off against sweden. we will have the latest on the game. and simone biles is back. 26-year-old makes her comeback and qualifies for national championships after a two-year break. we will have highlights. and the back and forth legal fight between former president donald trump and the special counsel. it comes as truck unleashes his sharpest attack yet against his own vice president. and a suspect charge inside the fatal stabbing of a professional dancer in new york. right now, it is whin or go home for the u.s. women's soccer team at the world cup, taking on sweden in the round of 16 in
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melbourne. >> the u.s. is the number one team in the world but have not played up to expectations so far, facing plenty of criticism from fans and former players after their first three games. but they have come out with a different energy this morning against the number three team in the world. as it stands, it is still scoreless at halftime. let's go live now to cnn sports correspondent carolyn manno who is live at a watch party in midtown, you manhattan. good morning. it sounds quite busy there for 6:00 in the morning. what you have seen from both sides so far and the fans who turned out? >> reporter: you know, it is really high energy in here. it's been a couple of minutes sing u since i have been at a bar at this hour. there is 50 to 60 fans here, and they showed up before the game started and they have provided a real spark inside. some are opting for pancakes at this hour. some are going to pilsner.
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but pits been a really impressive first half for the u.s. women. we know this is going to be a difficult match. they have met sweden a number of times on major international stages and they are well suited for each other. they are both physical. they have got really dynamic midfielders. they have got forwards that create a lot of chances. we have seen quality chances for the u.s. in front of the net so far. it's a really good sign. a couple of fans here, i have diego and ben. come on in, guys. you guys were here. what time did you show up morning? >> at about 4:00. >> we wanted to get seats. we stayed up all night. too excited for the game. >> reporter: liquid breakfast for your crew. what made you make the decision to come down here and be a part of it live at this hour. >> i really wanted to watch the game. i am a big fan. he is from new york, so he knew the bar, the spot to go to. and here we are. >> looking good so far, i'd say. >> reporter: what do you think
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so far? >> i feel pretty good. i feel like we came out flat the last few games. a lot of shots on target. one off the crossbar i wish we had. hopefully, one goes through. >> reporter: what has it meant to you guys -- [ inaudible ]. a lot made about rape rape and h megan rapinoe. how much fun to watch this group? >> a lot of fun. we have been extremely successful, winning the last two world cups. a lot of expectation into in one. we have hope. i like how we are playing so far. really exciting. >> reporter: i am going to let you go. feeling good, right? >> appreciate it. go usa. >> reporter: some usa chants happening here, guys. it's so much fun to be here. i mean, everybody knows that this is win or go home for the u.s. women, and we will see kind of what happens here in the next half as it's underway once again, but a lot of fun so far
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this morning. >> a lot of energy. they have been up all night. so that's impressive, too. carolyn manno. >> i don't want to know -- i want to know what bear and pan pancakes tastes like at six in the morning. >> reporter: i am not going to find out. >> thank you, carolyn. after two years away, simone biles returned to competition yesterday and, just like that, she won. >> i mean, it's like she never took that break, right? at the core hydration classic outside chicago, the 26-year-old u.s. star won the all-around vault floor routine and balance beam and placed third on the uneven bars. >> biles last competed at the tokyo olympics. she withdraw from several events
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after suffering a mental block. saturday, there were no signs of the dreaded twisties, the disorienting condition that causes gymnastics to lose track of their position in midair. a legal setback has not kept donald trump to continue to rail. special counsel jack smith wants a judge to set limits on what trump's legal team can do with evidence in the case. the judge denied their request to extend the deadline. trump taking aim at the special counsel. alayna treene has details. >> reporter: good morning, victor and amara. the former president spoke to a group of south carolina republicans saturday night and used his speech, much of his speech, to criticize the recent charges he is facing as well as specifically going after special counsel jack smith. he called him, quote, deranged, as well as mentally ill. he also made an appeal to
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congress, specifically republicans on capitol hill, to, quote, step up and do something in light of the recent indictments. now, one key difference about his saturday remarks is that he continued to talk about the case less than 24 hours after jack smith in a court filing friday night had asked the judge to set limits on what donald trump's team can do with the evidence shared in the election -- pointing to one of donald trump's posts, quote, if you go after me, i'm coming after you. now, the judge ultimately ruled that donald trump's team has to respond to that proposal by monday afternoon despite the former president's team wanting to extend that to thursday. it's important to note that donald trump's team wants him to keep talking about the charges. they do think that he benefits politically from it. at least among his republican primary voters. but it was very unclear going into tonight whether the former president would be swayed by
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this recent court filing from the special counsel's team and would kind of shift his rhetoric. clearly, he did not. >> thank you. now, a fourth criminal indictment against donald trump now seems likely. this time in the state of georgia. >> the case focuses on the former president's efforts to overturn the state's 2020 election results. a security around the courthouse there has ramped up ahead of potential charges. cnn's brian todd has more. >> reporter: this was never supposed to happen in america. the already enormous legal pressure on the former president is likely about to intensify. a grand jury in georgia expected to consider criminal charges against donald trump and his republican allies. >> in terms of the georgia case, it's going to add a nsignifican burden on him to defend yet another case. these cases will have significant trial deadlines and pretrial deadlines for hearings he is going to have to be involved is with and that will detract from his campaign.
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>> reporter: a decision whether to seek charges against the former president in georgia will be made in the next few weeks by a team led by fulton county district attorney fani willis. >> working for two and a half years, we're ready to go. >> reporter: it focuses on the mult-pronged effort trump launc launched to overturn results in georgia. it included pressure on georgia's governor and secretary of state, both republicans, to find enough votes to flip joe biden's win in the state. >> what are we gonna do? i only need 11,000 votes. fellas, i need 11,000 votes. give me a break. >> reporter: when the governor and secretary of state refused to go along, he urged state lawmakers to convene a special session to reverse biden's richt i. rudy giuliani went to the georgia house and senate with bogus voter fraud claims. >> rudy giuliani is considered to have a lot of exposure in georgia because he spoke at those legislative hearings and we know a lot of the information
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he shared was not true at the time. >> reporter: other trump allies who could face criminal charges are republican activists the trump campaign recruit today serve as fake electors. >> about half of them have received immunity deals, which indicates they are working with the prosecution to tell them what they know. >> reporter: cnn has reported that fani willis is considering bringing charges of conspiracy and racketeering in this case. >> racketeering charges are typically broader criminal schemes involving multiple individuals, and eventually the maximum punishment for those types of charges are typically much higher than other charges that are mentioned here. >> reporter: testimony has been sought in the georgia case from former trump white house chief of staff mark meadows and republican senator lindsey graham. fani willis told local officials of threats she has received, many of them of a racist nature during the period she has been investigating this case.
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>> i probably have been called the n world more times in the last two years than most people combined. >> reporter: throughout the georgia investigation donald trump has vehemently denied wrongdoing. he lashed out at fani willis, calling her racist and, quote, a luntist marxist. brian todd, washington. >> thank you. we are seeing a growing number of 2024 presidential hopefuls shift their strategy. they are going after president biden by targeting vice president cakamala harris. it's to raise concerns about biden's aim and the prospect of a president harris. >> if we muff this one and biden gets in again, heck, you may end up with kamala as president. >> you are counting on a president harris. the idea he makes it to 86 years old is not something that i think is likely. >> you think his act looks bad
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now, wait until he gets to 83 and 84 and 85 and 86. and by the way, in case he doesn't, you get kamala harris. >> the stories from cnn reporter daniel strauss and he is with us now. good morning to you. why the shift now? why this? why now? >> it's partially because vice president harris' poll numbers are underwater. his disapproval numbers are higher than her approval numbers, which givers republicans an opening they feel to highlight both her as sort of the prototypical figurehead of this administration and to, in the process, also point to biden's age. ok, what's important here also is that these attacks on harris come after attempts to peg biden as a socialist, peg him as too old and feeble minded, and argue that he is
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just not up for this job. the fact that they are shifting their tact to harris suggests that those attacks on biden aren't effective as they would like. there is sort of a menacing prospect of the unknown. we don't know what a president harris administration would be like. voters don't know what that would be like. in many ways, they know what a second term biden administration would be like. so the unknown is frightening and undesirable to a lot swath of voters. >> do people, though, vote based on the vp? we can look at 2008 and sara palin, her impact on the mccage ticket. she was a candidate for vice president. kamala harris is the sitting vice president. how effective could this be based on history? >> mine, history doesn't suggest that this will be very effective. generally, voters don't vote for the second person on a
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presidential ticket. usually, what happens is that the vice president or vice presidential nominee can do harm to a ticket, but can't really elevate that ticket in any substantial way. so here it's really just a move to highlight biden's age, and that's the real prospect here, the real point. atarks. >> turning to former president trump, now more critical of his once vice president mike pence after mike pence is now speaking more aggressively about the president, former president's actions between the election and the end of his administers. former president trump posted on social media that little mike pence, spelled with two ds, interestingly, has gone to the dark side. he is delusional. he is not a very nice person. and this comes as trump supporters have also challenged pence about his actions on january 6th on the campaign trail. how is pence and a half guiding
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this post trump indictment? >> i mean, it's a very narrow path that the former vice president is trying to take. he will often address and respond to voters who say that he could have overturned the election and just did not do it out of his own personal ambition, but pence will always say he did not have the authority as vice president to do that. he is pretty eager to contrast himself with trump but not in a way that will alienate trump voters. >> this is a perilous path for the former vice president, but it's not to be unexpected because this was always what would happen as trump's former vice president now challenging him in 2024. >> mitch mcconnell, the minority leader in the senate, he spoke at a picnic, fancy farm picnic,
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was drowned out by hecklers for a portion of the event. we have the video. let's play it. people are chanting "retire" and "ditch mitch," this after he froze for 22 seconds a little more than a week ago. is that partisan? because the reporting is that came from some of the democrats in the room, or are we seeing any impact beyond the partisanship that the moment we saw will have some consequence for him to hold on to leadership, to hold on to that seat? >> i mean, the fact that he froze at that conference has definitely been felt by politicos around d.c. it's not new that mcconnell is one of the longest serving caucus leaders in american history. at the same time, though, let's
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remember that in kentucky right now there is a hot gubernatorial election going on this year, and that means that voters are paying attention to politics and statewide politics at every level. it's not that surprising that at fancy farm, one of the most marquee state fairs in the country, that would be a large swath of voters who oppose mcconnell and would rather see him leave office. >> daniel strauss, thankfor helping us start it up sunday morning at six. thanks coming up on "state of the union," a pair of 24opefuls, former vice president mike pence and chris christie sit down with dana bash and a trump lawyer at 9:00 a.m. eastern right here on cnn. still ahead, a teen now faces murder charges as a hate crime after allegedly stabbing a gay man who was dancing at a gas
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station. also, some really scary moments at a florida theme park. a young boy injured in an apparent fall from a roller coaster. we'll have an update on his condition. plus, a polarizing debate. it's been polarizing our team here on "cnn this morning" for the last few hours, right, victor? who should tip? what should we tip? how much? yes. we're going to discuss. we will debate it. we will argue it. we will argue it. did i say that? >> yes. >> we're back after this. it cleans better, and doesn't leave behind irritating r residues. and it's gentle on her skin tide free & gentle is epa safer r choice certified. it's got to be tidee >> woman: why did we choose safelite? >> vo: for us, driving around is the only way we can get our baby to sleep, so when our windshld cracked, we needed it fixed right. we went to safelite.com. there's no one else we'd trust. their experts replaced our windshield,
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police say he shot two officers during a traffic stop on friday night. they say he was driving a vehicle linked to a homicide in miami. those officers said to be in critical condition. new yorkers are demanding justice after a man was killed while doing what he loved most. dancing. o'shea sibley was stabbed to death last month at a gas station in brooklyn. all he was doing was dancing to a beyonce song. >> hundreds gathered last night for a rally to remember sibley. they chanted, they marched, and, of course, they danced. police say they now have a suspect in custody, a teenager from brooklyn. a 17-year-old is facing a murder and hate crime charge for the stabbing death of professional dancer o'shea sibley. he was killed last weekend at a brooklyn, new york, gas station. according to police, a group of men shouting anti-gay slurs approached sibley, who had been dancing to a beyonce song before the stabbing.
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>> any human that enjoys something and they lose their life over it, we should put emphasis on it. we should shine a light on it. we should make it huge because this something that he actually died for. >> reporter: at a news conference saturday, nypd announced charges against the suspect. >> he has been charged with murder two, and that is being charged as a hate crime, and criminal possession of a weapon. he has been remanded. >> reporter: joseph kenny, assistant chief at the nypd's detective burrow says the teenager is the only person who will be charged in relation to the incident. kenny surrendered friday. a spokesperson with the new york city police department said he didn't know whether the suspect would be charged as an adult. the new york city mayor eric adams also spoke at the news conference. >> this is a city where you are free to express yourself, and that expression should never end with any form of violence. >> reporter: saturday night hundreds chanted sibley's name as they marched in solidarity.
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the alvin offly dance family shared this video of sibley dancing in a technique class. theyaid sibley was a cherished and devoted participant of the group. the artistic director said said we live in a world where the fact that someone wants to dance for joy can inspire hate. we dance for joy to inspire the humanity if each other. >> a horrible and tragic story there. up next, a remarkable story of survive in ukraine. video captures a struggle of an injured soldier on the battlefield. we will show you how ukrainian forces kept him alive. megawatts of power, rails and open road, and essential services of evevery kind. all runnining on countless invisible networks, making it a prime target for cyberattacks.
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ukraine says its air defenses fought off a russian attack overnight and shot down dozens of drones and cruise missiles and a key military airfield was among the targets. >> russian-guided bomb hit a blood transfusion center. setting it on fire. volodymr zelenskyy says there were casualties, but they don't know the numbers just yet. >> meantime, the battle on the front lines grinds on. cnn's nick paton walsh joins us from zaporizhzhia. tell us about how the soldiers on both sides are dealing with the harsh realities of the battlefield. >> reporter: yeah, look, it is an exceptionally difficult grind for ukraine in the important parts of their counteroffensive here in the south. and it is one where the casualties of which we don't have great transparency of, but one we see a toll being taking on civilian areas repeated strikes by the russians, off and
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on civilian targets and last night particularly intense. ukraine says they took down 17 of the 20 caliber missiles, but also the hypersonic missiles were fireders too. they say they took down all of the iranian-supplied drones. it isn't clear if they were what hit the airfield. that was one of the targets that ukraine's president said was hit, suggesting that may have been an integral part of ukraine's air campaign, trying to hit positions, too. in zaporizhzhia region where i'm standing, parts of the aviation industry may have been hit, too. little transparency often for operational reasons from ukraine about what targets have been successfully hit, but they tout how many missiles they
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intercepted. a separate narrative on the front lines, here is some footage of different fates of two soldiers. one ukrainian soldier injured in the battlefield and rescued by ukrainian drones that spotted him. the other more harrowing tori of a commander, left for dead by his own men but rescued by ukrainian medics despite the fact that he was pronounced dead in russia. here's that story. it is usually only the dead lying here in the craters of ukraine's southern front. but sometimes a glint of life shines. this drone spotting a ukrainian soldier, sergei, separated from his unit. wounded in the chest and leg by shell, he filmed this as he lay alone, bleeding. he feared whatever fight to live he put up would not be enough, he later told cnn from his hospital bed. >> i was ready to fight for my
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life, and i did, even lying there under the blazing sun. i realized i was too close to the russians and you even start to look at your gun in a different way. >> reporter: but the drone operators had other plans. they attached water, medicine and a note to the drone and sent it back. it found him again and dropped the package. but he didn't know if it was friendly or a russian bomb. >> translator: all the time i was crawling, a drone was always hovering above. we didn't realize if it was a friend or foe. >> reporter: this is the moment he realizes the drone may save him. the water and medicine kept coming, easing the pain that was visible, even from up high, and then he crawled back to safety. >> translator: the combat medics who gave me first-aid when they found me were surprised i
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survived for two days with appearsed lung. >> reporter: he is recovering and talks now of a new life with greater value and purpose. they don't want to leave anyone behind, said the drone operator. >> translator: every life is important to us. i could not live with myself if we just left someone behind in the field. >> reporter: probably several miles away, it was uglier. here as a ukrainian assault by the 15th national guard on a russian position. it is ferocious and eventually forced a dozen russian troops to pull back. artillery had injured the russian commander badly and the russians left him behind, presuming he was dead. but this video supplied by
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ukrainian forces shows they found him alive. he received medical treatment. b we are not naming him for his safety, but he was later awarded a posthumous medal, according to russian media reports. left behind and declared dead by his comrades. the ukrainians who found him say he may have wished he didn't survive. >> translator: we said, don't try anything, or you'll die. he asked us to shoot him. we offered him a chance to do it himself, but he said he could not do that. >> reporter: he is an enemy. >> i had no real desire to save him, but orders are orders, and they have our guys, and we can swap prisoners. >> as a human, another says, i was shocked they left him behind. but as a soldier, i know my enemy, an inkno know it's not u
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common for them. opposite fought on different sides in these wide, ugly expansions of violence. very grueling fight for often very small amounts of territory. yes, ukraine is definitely making progress here, but is a lot slower than they would like. it's held back by mine fields, a ferocious russian offensive. essentially, this is the most important part of the ukrainian war. if ukraine doesn't make progress towards the south here and break that land corridor between the crimean peninsula occupied by russia, there will likely be a more serious con cre teization. >> thank you for that. >> just ahead, this a remarkable new study that shows that a.i. detected breast cancer more often than doctors with years of experience. all while cutting the workloads
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♪ don't goooooo! ♪ ( ♪ ) ♪ don't go away ♪ get a free storage upgrade when you pre-order at t-mobile. ♪ please don't go ♪ let's take a look now at some other headlines this morning. oregon drivers are now allowed to pump their own gas after the state lifted a ban on self-service dating back to 1951. the law was signed friday by democratic governor tina kotek and went into effect immediately. it doesn't phase out full-service completely, but stations can't charge more for the service. this leaves new jersey as the only state where service station customers can not pump their own fuel. a 6-year-old boy was injured after apparently falling from a
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roller coaster. this happened in a theme park in florida. authorities said the ride, the galaxy spin, was nearly two dozen feet above where the child was found on thursday. the boy was transported to an orlando hospital. authorities say they are now investigating the incident. it can write papers, make you look younger on social media, and imitate anyone's voice. >> but now a new study shows that artificial intelligence could help detect more cancers than mammograms. meg tirrell has more. >> reporter: it's been suggested for some time that artificial intelligence may be able to help improve reading things like mammograms, but this is the first trial the researchers think that really set out to study this. they looked at 80,000 women in sweden who were getting routine mammograms. >> they separated them in two groups. one group, they were read by a doctor, but first read by artificial intelligence. in the other group, standard way
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of reading mammograms was done with two radiologists. what they found is that in the group supported by a.i., for every 1,000 women screened, six cases of breast cancer were detected compared with five for the standard way of doing this. they found also that the artificial intelligence supported screening did not find more false/positives or cases where it detected cancer that wasn't there. that's good news as well. another really important thing here is that they found that the artificial intelligence supported screening could reduce the workload for radiologists by 44%. now, that's based on the fact in europe it's standard for two raid olgists to look at a mammogram, whereas, in the united states, that's not the standard. there might not be such a strong reduction in the u.s., but still there is a hope this could help with a shortage of radiologists which is expected to get worse as the population worse.
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so more mammograms are going to need to be read. if artificial intelligence could work safely, work effectively and take away some tv that wor workload for radiologists, that could be a big step forward. >> thanks so much. all right. up next, this is something we've been discussing, debating. perhaps arguing about this morning. i think something -- it's something that a lot of americans have debated. is america's tipping culture out of control? how much tip is appropriate? when do you actually tip? when is it okay not to tip? if you ask many people in the service industry, they will tell you there is a problem. we are going to discuss tipping etiquette and, i don't know, maybe get perspectives after the break. retired right? am i? ya! save up to $500 on the new sleep number® smart bed. plus, free home delivery when you add an adjdjustable base. shop now only at sleep numbmber®. my most important kitchen tool?
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when should you tip? when should you not tip? how much should you tip? so many questions about our tipping culture, right? and as inflation cools and americans feel better about the economy, the question of when, who, and how much seems to be at the forefront of many people's minds. well, a new study by bank rate shows that nearly two-thirds of americans have a negative view on tipping, and 30% say tipping has gotten out of control. so, when is it appropriate to tip, and how has the impact of inflation changed that? let's bring in ted ross man, a senior industry analyst with bank rate. so glad you are joining us this morning because there is so much debate about this. not that we, you know, many people agree on this. one thing that americans agree on is there is at least, you know, something about tipping that we don't like. tell us about what this survey found. what was president the big take.
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why are people so frustrated about tipping? >> there is a lot of tip fatigue going on. i think a lot of that gets back to this tip creep that we see. being asked to tip in unconventional situations. these tip prompts have become common place at coffee shops and food trucks and elsewhere. i mean, i have been asked to tip at a self-checkout machine at newark airport. it's gone amok. and that's what about two-thirds of americans say, they have some sort of negative view towards tipping. 30% don't like those automated tip prompts. about four in ten think that businesses should just pay their staff better rather than asking us customers to make up the difference. i think a lot of people have kind of hit this inflection point where earlier in the pandemic people thought tip nor generously. i think that's faded. we see people tipping less often across the board. >> self-service kiosks asking
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you for a tip, that defeats of purpose of the whole concept of tipping, right? a lot of people tip for good service, but if it's self-service, maybe you should be tipping yourself. i don't know. okay. so tipping etiquette. in what situations is it okay -- i mean, because i feel a lot of us feel guilty. even takeout, right, i pause at the tip. and if i don't tip, which i have before, i feel guilty about it when i leave. is it okay -- in what situations can you not tip and not feel guilty about it? >> i don't think you need to tip for counter service. if you are just picking up a simple takeout order or coffee to go, what's interesting, you mentioned guilt tipping. starbucks unveiled tipping functionally on payment terminals last year when people pay with a credit or debit card. they say half of customers are tipping. this is interesting to me because i am sure nowhere that
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many were putting bills or coins in the old-fashioned tip jar. it hits you over the head nowadays. a lot of people feel bad about it, but they still end up tipping. i would really draw a line here between an optional tip for a quick takeout order versus something that should be more customary. you should be tipping at a sitdown restaurant. two-thirds of americans are always tipping in that scenario. only about half always tip for food delivery and haircuts. i think that should be better as well. >> you think it should be done, tipping for food delivery, as well? >> i think definitely, yeah. i think for something like food delivery or a taxi or rideshare, a haircut, a sitdown restaurant meal, i think all of these we should be tipping about 20%. but i don't think you always need to be tipping for just that quick counter service interaction. sometimes this amounts to a revenue grab on the part of the company. i was asked to tip at a pick
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your own strawberry farm this summer. that felt like overreach to me. >> i want to bring this up. tipped workers receive a federal minimum wage of $2.13 per hour. that apply to service at the restaurant. my thing is, and this is frustrating, and, yes, i always tip at a restaurant. i true to be as generous as possible. why is the burden on the customers, you know? that certain employees get a fair wage. shouldn't it be on the employers. 41% feel that businesses should pay their employees a better wage. >> a lot of people feel that way. where the rubber really meets the road is we say we want to pay more, but i am not sure that would work out. danny meyer, the famous restaurateur who runs the union square hospitality group tried to do away with tipping and raised prices by about 20%. i think it was well intentioned. it didn't really work out though. i think at the end of the day, we can't see past the higher
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prices. companies are looking to customers to make up more of the burden. tipping has become a hidden surcharge. >> yeah, or not so hidden. ted ross man, appreciate your time this morning. thank you. when i tell you that we talked -- >> victor has no opinion. >> wabout this for an hour this morning. there are some very passionate opinions about this. >> including yourself. including me. i am passionate about this. all right. i always tip, you know, go to a restaurant, you go and have a meal, sit down, pay 20% because, as you said, 2 $.13 is factered in. i went to a place where you get the frozen yogurt. you choose the yogurt, toppings, yadi yadi. i s sat it on the scale and there was an option to tip. i put everything in the cup. i put it on the scale. it was self-service.
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why am i tipping? >> i agree. >> when you travel overseas, you find yourself overtipping. sometimes it's offensive to certain cultures. in asia or korea, the cab driver, i literally tipped his 20%. he gave me the money back. my problem with tipping is the expectation, right? someone expects 20 or more percent. shouldn't it be based on what you want to do? if you feel like you got good service, whatever it is, hair, car -- >> excluding restaurants where they -- >> yeah, i feel like sitdown restaurants is given. it's the expectation that bothers me. it should be based on service and how you feel versus, well, what the employers are paying. i shouldn't feel guilted into tipping somebody because their employer is paying them $2 an hour. >> we have to -- to say, whoa, you should pay -- >> that burden shouldn't be
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shifted to us, the guilt, the guilty conscience. >> i hear that. the takeout, one element is people are passionate about tipping at takeout. i thought i was tipping for service, but if i am going to pick up my food, and if i were at a restaurant being served, i was tipping the server, does that money get to the person in the kitchen, the bar? that's a question. >> tweet away or instagram us away, let us know what you think. be nice about it. >> also, we should say, in europe they have universal health care and pay their waiters -- we got to go.can you? from "star trek" to "west world," inside the revolution in a new episode of see it baloud tonight on cnn. we'll be rigight back. the google cybersecurity certificate was made to fill that gapp and help grow w the workforce that's keeping us all safe.
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